Monday Musette – Weekend Wrap-Up

That was quite a weekend, huh? The Vuelta, semi-classics in Belgium and France, the Tour of Britain, the new Canadian Pro Tour events ,and the opening events of the domestic cyclocross calendar meant a busy weekend for teams, fans, and pundits. Let’s take a look:

1. It was a dramatic Saturday in Spain where Liquigas’ Vincenzo Nibali took over the lead in the Spanish grand tour following the crash and abandon of Euskaltel’s Igor Anton. For Nibali, it was his second chance to wear the leader’s jersey in a grand tour this season following his time in pink at the Giro. For Anton, his dream September came to a skidding halt, robbing the rider of his chance to win an event that was beginning to look more and more as if it were his to lose.

On Sunday, Xacobeo’s Ezequiel Mosquera did his best to wrestle the race lead away from Nibali, escaping five kilometers from the top of the Lagos de Covadonga—but he only gained a measly 11 seconds. Today however, Joaquin Rodriguez had better luck, taking the race lead from Nibali on the final two kilometers Alto de Cotobello.

Rodriguez now has a 33-second lead over the Italian, with Mosquera another 20-seconds back in third. Nibali’s best chance to regain the lead comes Wednesday, with a 46-kilometer time trial in Peñafiel. He’ll need all the time he can get though, for Saturday’s penultimate stage offers one more chance for Rodriguez on the HC summit finish to Bola del Mundo. Look for Stage 20 to give us one of the closest Vuelta finishes in years—and a fitting finale to this season’s grand tours.

2. Moving north, Saturday’s 90th running of the Paris-Brussels semi-classic was won by the Spaniard Francesco Ventoso of the Camioroo-NGC team. Vacansoleil’s Roman Feillu took second, only to go one better the next day at the Grand Prix Fourmies in northern France. Sunday’s win meant Feillu successfully defended his title from last year’s race—he’s now the first back-to-back winner since Jean-Luc Vandenbroucke in 1976-1977.

3. At the Tour of Britain, HTC-Columbia won two of the first three stages with Andre Greipel taking the sprint win on Stage 1 and Michael Albasini taking Stage 3 after a rainy, undulating finish today in Swansea. With few major difficulties (the kind that cause major GC splits) between now and the race’s final stage in London on Sunday, there’s little reason to believe Albasini and his team won’t take the final victory—and several more stage wins as well. Team Sky will give it their best shot—Greg Henderson’s already won Stage 2 for the home team, but he’s unlikely to mount a serious challenge for the overall. The best challenge might come from Vacansoleil—the team has riders in fourth through sixth places on GC, making them a threat should one of these men find himself a major

4. Back in France, the Tour de L’Avenir ended yesterday with an uphill time trial to Risoul. The race—and the final two stages—went to Colombia’s Alexander Quintanarojas, while American (and Garmin-Cervélo recruit) Andrew Talansky took second on GC. For the Colombian squad, the overall victory adds to the team’s impressive international run this season, adding a second major stage race to their victory in June’s Giro Bio (won by Carlos Betancur). With top international U23 talent such as Taylor Phinney, John Degenkolb, and Yannick Eijssen all taking stage wins, look for several of the race’s key protagonists to be hitting a Pro Tour squad near you sometime soon.

5. And last but not least, the Pro Tour made a fabulous North American debut this weekend with two events in Quebec. BBox’s Thomas Voeckler and Rabobank’s Robert Gesink took the wins after two days of aggressive racing. Several stars choosing to make the trip, one can only wonder what’s keeping US promoters from obtaining Pro Tour events of their own. With big budget stage races like the Tour of Georgia and the Tour of Missouri falling by the wayside, maybe the better strategy calls for running two solid one-day events in close proximity to one another. After all, the Tour of California has jumped through all sorts of hoops and it still can’t claim Pro Tour status, yet these two races earned it with hardly a test run. Does the American race promotion philosophy need to change? Or do American promoters not care about Pro Tour status?

6. Moving from road to mud, the domestic cyclocross season opened this weekend with several races across the country. Look for the season’s first Domestic Power Ranking in a day or two. Will Nittany Cross winner Luke Keough make the list?

7. Lastly, would you like to contribute to Pavé? We’re currently accepting submissions in effort to provide consistent, quality content. Speculation, prognostication—we’re happy to consider just about anything. If interested, drop us a line at paveblog@gmail.com with your ideas.

So you have it–what were your highlights from the weekend? Which performances did you find most impressive?

Share your comments below.

About Whit

My experiences might easily fit many cycling fans' definitions of “living the dream.” Since getting hooked on the sport watching Lance Armstrong win the 1993 U.S. Pro Championship, I've raced as an amateur on Belgian cobbles, traveled Europe to help build a European pro team, and piloted that team from Malaysia to Mont Ventoux. As a former assistant director sportif with Mercury-Viatel, I've also seen the less dreamy side of the sport – the side rife with broken contracts, infighting, and positive dope tests. These days, I live with my lovely wife in Pennsylvania and share my experiences and views on the sport at Bicycling Magazine, the Embrocation Cycling Journal, and at my own site, Pavé.

2 Responses to Monday Musette – Weekend Wrap-Up

Re: American Pro Tour races. I thought the big stumbling block was that Continental teams are not allowed in Pro Tour races and most US teams are at that level and there aren’t enough high level events to entice US teams to make the jump to Pro Conti.

If the UCI, updates the rules to allow Pro Conti teams in more of the lower level events, as they seem to be considering then I think that will make a bike difference and you might see some Pro Tour races pop up.

I definitely agree that one day races seem to be the way to go versus longer tours

Right on, those two races in Quebec looked amazing. Picturesque routes (especially the one in Quebec City), good, challenging, circuit courses, and what appeared to be solid organization, including TV coverage. Our coverage in Canada was in HiDef, as well.

They used the guys who used to put on the old Montreal race back in the day, and it showed. Phenomenal first outing for those two races.